About Me

Ray Koenig Jr. was born Dec. 30, 1946 in Washington DC. He graduated from Bishop O’Connell High School in Arlington VA in 1964 and from Villanova University with a Bachelor’s Degree in Civil Engineering in 1968. In 1973 he was first licensed as a professional engineer (PE) in Washington DC. He was subsequently licensed to practice engineering in eight other states (VA, MD, SC, PA, DE, WV, NC, GA). In 1974 he was first licensed as a professional land surveyor (PLS) in Virginia, and in 1975 he was licensed to practice land surveying in Maryland. During most of his 40+ yr. career Ray Koenig Jr. worked for consulting engineering firms in metropolitan Washington DC. From 1973 to 1976 Ray Koenig Sr. and Ray Koenig Jr. worked together at A. Raymond Koenig and Sons in Bethesda MD.
Ray Koenig Jr. married Jenny Marie Johnston of Arlington VA in 1966. They raised their four children (Michelle, Ken, Karen, and Cheryl) in northern VA. Ray and Jenny are now retired and live in Strasburg VA. They have two grandsons, Kyle (22) and Jeremy (5).
Ray Koenig Jr. has several blogs in which he uses his pseudonym, PEretired.

Friday, May 13, 2011

DHEC

May River wetlands 'overwhelmed' by stormwater, leading to higher bacteria levels

By ALLISON STICEastice@islandpacket.comPublished Wednesday, May 11, 2011While local ponds are helping treat polluted water before it reaches the May River, Bluffton's water quality testing has found that run-off is becoming contaminated as it passes over the wetlands.

Samples taken from local ponds, which catch run-off from development, are relatively clean. But the water tested downstream from the ponds into the river is registering high levels of bacteria, town natural resources manager Kim Jones said.

"The wetlands aren't doing what we all assumed wetlands do, which is treat water," Jones said. "You would think the wetlands would be a sink and not a source."

The town's water quality testing program, ongoing since spring of 2009, has proven the fact over and over again, Jones said. County stormwater manager Dan Ahern said Beaufort County's testing has also found similar findings.

Jones said the high level of contamination could be due to wildlife, or dormant fecal coliform in the wetland bottom reactivated by the pond water moving over it.

Ahern said the real problem is that the ponds -- the preferred method for catching polluted water from development -- must be discharging the water too fast.

Any remedy will have to reduce the volume, Ahern said. Decreasing run-off from a flow to a trickle has been the focus of county efforts to curb pollution in the local waterways.

Encouraging people to retrofit their ponds to use them for irrigation instead of letting them flow onto the river could be one potential solution, Ahern said.

"In retrospect, we should have built retention ponds instead of detention ponds," Ahern said.The testing has helped the town identify hotspots of fecal coliform which a forthcoming consultant-prepared May River Watershed Action Plan will address, Jones said. The plan is being reviewed by town staff, will be up for public comment over the summer and will be adopted by town council in September.

Jones declined to give details about potential treatment.

The fact that the wetlands are "overwhelmed" with stormwater is obvious, said May River Road resident Brandon Waring, who urged Bluffton Town Council on Tuesday to keep promises to restore shellfishing in the May.

"The science was ignored," Waring said in an interview. "It wasn't unknown."...NICE GOING, local governments and DHEC! What a GREAT job that you're doing NOT protecting our valuable coastal resources. "Could of... Should of..." When are you going to get with the program?

Bluffton, you SAY that you're about protecting the May; but, you continue to annex properties and approve new developments that dump more and more stormwater into the May. Beaufort County, the same can be said about you with the Okatie. The Town of Hardeeville and Jasper Counties are even worse (if that's possible). YOU know what the problem is! Stop being HYPOCRITICAL and solve it! 1. STOP annexing properties for development. 2. For new development, require developers to retain 100% of their stormwater on their developments for irrigation during dry periods. 3. For existing development, build public ponds that will intercept stormwater before it reaches wetalnds, and the May and the Okatie, and hold it for irrigation during dry periods.

DHEC, in my 40+ year career as a practicing civil engineer, I NEVER saw a state environmental agency doing a poorer job. You don't regulate pond depth. Ponds are built shallower than the plans that you approve, and you do NOTHING. Untreated stormwater is dumped into wetlands, and you do NOTHING. Newly constructed pond control structures leak like sieves, and you're UNAWARE. CONTROL STRUCTURES SHOWN ON THE APPROVED PLANS AREN'T EVEN BUILT, AND YOU'RE UNAWARE. ENTIRE PONDS AREN'T EVEN BUILT, AND YOU'RE UNAWARE.

It's pathetic. DO YOUR JOB! PROTECT THE VALUABLE COASTAL RESOURCES THAT MAKE THIS AREA WHAT IT IS!..